Hauppauge is taking its HD component capture card internal

Haupauge internal HD PVR

It wasn’t that long ago that recording HD from just about any source on a PC was cost prohibitive. Then along came Hauppauge’s HD PVR and while it isn’t without its issues and limitations, it gets the job done at an affordable price. One of those limitations is the rather large external enclosure and the wall-wart that powers it. Now Hauppauge has addressed those nit picks with the release of an internal PCI-E capture card for $159. The single card can record up to 1080i from either component or unencrypted HDMI and will start shipping later this month. The support is very similar it its external brother, in fact other than the form factor, the two are very similar in most every other way. Another pictures and technical details after the jump.

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Hauppauge is taking its HD component capture card internal originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 00:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ford introduces MyFord Mobile app for smartphones

Sadly Ford isn’t confirming the Focus Electric that it saw fit to tease earlier this week, but we can now tell you all about the new smartphone app that will let you monitor the charging of… certain Ford vehicles. The app is called MyFord Mobile and it offers similar features to the apps we’ve already seen for the Nissan Leaf and the Chevy Volt, notably car’s charging status from afar and deliver some climate settings to ensure that the car is properly hot or cold before you leave on your cold or hot commute. The car will also let you find the car by GPS and, once you do, unlock the doors with your phone.

When the car and the app launches there will be versions for Android, BlackBerry, and iOS, though interestingly there will be a an HTML-5 browser interface that’ll even work on featurephones. Yes, featurephones. Interestingly, the app can automatically charge… whatever mystery vehicle you connect it to at the optimal time of the night to ensure you get the lowest cost for your juice, automatically pulling down rates from your utility so that you don’t have to worry about it. That is what we like to call smart. And thrifty.

Again the app will be available with a certain car that has a plug whenever that certain car is available, and if you want to know when that is going to happen you’re going to have to wait.

Update: Yes, that’s a WP7 phone up there, a Samsung Focus to be exact. No, the app is not announced for Windows Phone 7. Conclusion? Cloudy. We’ll have a little more clarification for you later today and you’re just going to have to wait. Plenty of time to sharpen up those conspiracy theories.

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Ford introduces MyFord Mobile app for smartphones originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Beamz laser instrument gets upgraded to please hardcore laser rockers and gamers alike

The demonstration of four-player Rock Band Mobile at Samsung’s CES 2011 press conference was pretty slick, but to the folks at Beamz, that kind of music gaming is still so amateur compared to its laser switch-activated jam sessions. That’s because they’ve redesigned their original product to be more living room-friendly thanks to a black paint job and a slimmer profile. They’ve also tried to appeal more to the gaming set by expanding the Beamz song library beyond the original 80 developed by independent artists to include “top hit jams” – aka cover versions of top 40 tracks — and 35 licensed “video songs” from Disney and EMI. So if you’d like to laser thump the bass to Blondie’s Heart of Glass music video, you can. Additionally, the Beamz software has been upgraded to support up to three laser instruments on the same track and recording for a real band experience — though it still only runs on PCs. For $200, we don’t expect these to fly off shelves, but for those who’ve mastered the whammy bar, it’s at least another way to get your faux music-making fix.

Beamz laser instrument gets upgraded to please hardcore laser rockers and gamers alike originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 23:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Reycom Windows Media Center coming for $499

Reycom Media Center

We love us some Windows 7 Media Center, but we recognize that using a HTPC for a DVR isn’t for everyone. For some there is no replacement for a dedicated set-top box, which is why we were so excited to hear that Windows Media Center was coming to embedded devices. The problem of course is that is-coming and is-here, are completely different. A little known European company (state side anyways) hopes to change that by brining one to the US in the first quarter of this year for about $499. The bad news is that there’s no CableCARD support like the Gateway one we saw earlier. There are plans to follow it up with dedicated versions for cable and telecom operators later this year, but for some reason we don’t feel like they’ll be too interested in it.

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Reycom Windows Media Center coming for $499 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 23:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Huawei IDEOS X5 hands-on (video)

Huawei was right on cue here at CES today, announcing the US version of its IDEOS X5 mid-range Android smartphone. This device uses the same formula as the original IDEOS (also known as the Comet for T-Mobile) and aims to provide a decent product at a competitive price. Although we already knew the specs, this was our chance to play with the IDEOS X5 and gather more information. The phone looks elegant and feels solidly built, with a 3.8-inch WVGA capacitive display behind glass in front and 1500mAh battery behind soft-touch plastics in back, all wrapped in an 11.4mm-thin body. Take a look at the gallery below, and hit the break for additional details and our hands-on video.

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Huawei IDEOS X5 hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 23:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell Venue announced for the US, will be sold unlocked

We knew the Dell Venue was coming stateside, but now we know it. Dell has announced the phone for our fine country at its CES 2011 press conference, although it failed to mention a price, a release date, or anything else very helpful. Right now Dell doesn’t have a carrier partner, so they’re planning on selling the handset unlocked from Dell.com. Apparently they’re flirting with the idea of a T-Mobile version, but the unlocked model won’t have the T-Mobile 3G bands — basically, it’s an unlocked AT&T phone that AT&T hasn’t blessed. Oh, and just in case you forgot the specs: WVGA 4.1-inch AMOLED screen, 8 megapixel camera, Android 2.2, and a 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 8250 processor. Got it? Good, now we wait.

Dell Venue announced for the US, will be sold unlocked originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 23:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Memjet: ink-on with the world’s fastest printer

Sure the world of digital printing might not catch many people’s eye, but there’s something otherworldly about just how fast this thing spits out pages. Memjet‘s office reference printer is fast. How fast? 60 pages a minute, fast. Print quality looks fine at 1600 dots per inch and reportedly half the cost of ownership of other color printers. The trick behind the speed are the 70,000 nozzles firing more than 700 million drops of ink per second that print the page in one pass rather than the several passes of traditional inkjets — or enough for a page a second. We’re pretty sure if we had one of these at our disposal we’d be throwing as much material as we could at it just to watch the magic on the output side.

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Memjet: ink-on with the world’s fastest printer originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 23:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Orbotix Sphero iOS-controlled toy ball hands-on

It’s not even close to an AR.Drone, but the Orbotix Sphero should find a way to eat up your precious productivity when it hits shelves sometime “later this year.” This 4.3-inch LED-lit sphere connects to your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch via Bluetooth, and allows you to remotely control it or change its color… and that’s about it. There are two different input modes — one that uses the built in accelerometers and another joystick mode that utilizes a large virtual circular joystick on-screen. The few minutes we spent with the sphere were mildly entertaining, but the lack of cameras or other sensors makes it kind of pointless. Still, we could see young kids going wild for this and refusing to give you back your iPhone to take a call. Orbotix detailed a game dubbed “QuizTug” in which multiple players connect to the same Sphero and try to “score” while the other player completes a math problem or some other type of question — an interesting idea for sure. Operation definitely took a little bit of getting used to, and we still didn’t have it quite down pat after about five or ten minutes but we’re sure with some practice we’d be shredding the half pipe like our demo dude was. The existence of an open API makes us optimistic for the future of this little guy, especially given the sub-$100 pricetag. Check it out in our hands-on gallery or in the video posted after the break, and let us know what you’d do with this thing in the comments.

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Orbotix Sphero iOS-controlled toy ball hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 22:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Planon Slimscan, world’s slimmest scanner, hands-on (video)

Been needing a credit card scanner to execute your superspy data collection with? Say hello to your new best buddy, the Planon Slimscan. This teeny tiny unit is equipped with a 600dpi optical scanner, though it shrinks images down to a 300dpi resolution to get a reasonable number of them to fit within the 64MB of onboard memory. Intended primarily as a collector of business card and receipt data, the Slimscan will come with Abbyy and PaperPort software along with the ability to export your stuff out to an Excel spreadsheet. Pricing is set at $120 and shipping is expected to commence any time now.

Continue reading Planon Slimscan, world’s slimmest scanner, hands-on (video)

Planon Slimscan, world’s slimmest scanner, hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 22:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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An Electronic Cane for the Blind

isonic.jpg

We see so many shiny new gadgets at CES every year, but unfortunately, not too many of them really have the power to, you know, help people. That’s why it’s always nice to spot a product like iSonic, an electronic cane for the visually impaired.
I got a chance to take it for a spin, and I’ve got to say, it’s pretty neat. Click it on and put it on the ground, and it will begin to vibrate when your path isn’t clear. The iSonic can detect obstructions up to two meters away. It works 55 degrees vertically and 25 degrees horizontally. The vibration intensity increases or decreases, based on how far away an object is.
Also neat: The wand of the device can identity colors–a built-in voice will alert your when something is red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, white, or black, when waved over it. It also tells you how dark it is outside.